Which means what? That you want the user to be able to view a video of some sort that originated from your site?

radha123 from Hyderabad wrote:

how i have to plan

First step - requirements.
For example what is a realistic, not pie in the sky, estimate for the following
- Total number of users
- Average number of users
- Peak number of users
- Number of videos.
- Types of videos (30 seconds, 5 hours, HD, etc.)
- Number of videos
- How the content is managed (all users manage own videos, some users do, only company does.)
- How do the users interact with the system (is it watch one video a day, video editing, searching, etc.)

Wow. I'm amazed you bother to answer with what was actually asked for.

Personally I feel the responsible answer is something along the lines of "unless this is a pet project to learn, you aren't ready for it; either study and practice for a long time, or hire someone who can program to do the job".

The question betrays that we are dealing with an absolute beginner (by assuming that there is one way in which websites are or should be developed).

Here is my code it checks only for 2 choices black and white but when i say 1 it changes background color to white(this is really weird) I have already done computer training and even when i say 1 and it thinks it detected it right i get a confidence of 0.9 which blows my mind

Imports System.Speech.Synthesis
Imports System.Speech.Recognition

Public Class Form1

Dim speaker As New SpeechSynthesizer
Public WithEvents recog As New SpeechRecognitionEngine

Some for you: if you have a problem then explain it clearly. If you are asked for more information, provide it. As tyou do not pay for the help here, don't expect other people to do your work for you. And finally, learn some manners.

I would guess you did, but you didn't say so in the question. Taking a rational approach, we look to identify the first possible point of failure, and work up from there. Debugging would probably be more beneficial then experimenting with different settings and platforms.

If you're convinced that the code is correct, I'd guess that the speech-engine does not have a "1" in it's dictionary, and being a non-existent word, it'd take the next best thing.

I'd guess that the speech-engine does not have a "1" in it's dictionary, and being a non-existent word, it'd take the next best thing.

Actually, that looks to be exactly the problem. The grammarbuilder only has two words loaded into it, "Black" and "White". Given that "White" and "One" both start the same phonetically, it seems quite likely it's getting a high match probability.